The Mass Mutual fire of 1873

When I saw this unique stereoview for sale, I just had to buy it. It depicts the downtown Springfield block that used to house the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company. It isn't your typical stereoview because it shows this block right after it suffered a devastating fire.

The book King's Handbook of Springfield pinpoints the date. It says:

The office of the company was in rented rooms in Foot's Block from 1851 until early in 1868, when it was removed to the company's own handsome and well-known building on Main Street.

The next move was a sudden one; for on the evening of Feb. 5, 1873, a fire broke out in the lower part of the building (which was rented for mercantile purposes), and raged all night, destroying all the rear and much of the front part of the structure.

The company's safes, and most of its books and papers, were preserved; and business was transacted, with but little interruption, in temporary quarters in the Hampden House Block on Court Street.

By December of the same year the company's own building had been rebuilt, re-arranged, and improved, under the supervision of George Hathorne, the New York architect, and its own offices were reoccupied.

The lofty brown-stone front and iron mansard roof form a handsome and conspicuous feature of the street; while the Masonic lodges and other organizations that occupy the floors over the company's offices, and the stores that are on the ground floor, make the inside of the building familiar to a great number of people.

Here are some other photos and sketches of the structure, from after its renovation.

Mass Mutual Sketch from King's Handbook

Mass Mutual Block from Illustrated Springfield

Update: Here is another stereoview of the destroyed Massachusetts Mutual building.

I do not know much about Kibbe, but I know that Kibbe lived in the big Italianate Mansion on the corner of Worthington St and Bowdoin St in the McKnight neighborhood and preceeded the the McKnight development. Possibly he or someone after him remodeled the outside and added a lot of Colonial Revival features, but the house is still there. For a very long time it was an odd Fellows Hall and then a VFW post in the 1970-80's.
I understand that the Kibbe Candy company was one of those companies that did very well during the Civil War selling candy "to be sent to the boys" at the front. Stationary companies did well too for the same reason.